The Reliability of Old Tech vs. the Complexity of Modern Tech

The author contrasts the reliability of older technology with the complexities of modern "smart" technology, using a 41-year-old TI-99/4A home computer as an example. The old computer boots instantly, requiring no updates, cloud connectivity, or subscription fees, showcasing straightforward computing. In contrast, the author's Google Nest router fails to connect after an update, rendering smart bulbs unusable. The article criticizes the modern tech industry's conflation of complexity with progress, highlighting over-reliance on abstraction and layered software architectures, making systems difficult to understand and repair. The author argues that the hype surrounding AI reflects this "forgetting," where statistical advancements are overblown as revolutionary breakthroughs, neglecting underlying principles. Ultimately, the author calls for a return to simple, reliable design, emphasizing the importance of understanding fundamental knowledge and principles, avoiding dependence on tools at the expense of technical mastery.
Read more